Registered user since Wed 2 May 2018
Marco Autili is a Professor of Software Engineering at the Department of Information Engineering, Computer Science, and Mathematics (DISIM), University of L’Aquila.
He graduated with honors in Computer Science at the University of L’Aquila in April 2004, and received his Ph.D. in April 2008 with the highest distinction.
He collaborates with various companies and international research groups worldwide. He has consolidated experience in European Union and Italian research and development projects, serving as principal investigator, scientific and technical project leader, research unit coordinator, and work package leader.
He is the (co-)author of approximately 130 publications in international journals, conference proceedings, book chapters, and editorials.
He serves as a reviewer for several international conferences, workshops, and top-tier international journals. He is also an associate editor and a member of the editorial board for several international journals. Additionally, he acts as the lead guest editor for various special issues and thematic series and is actively involved in the organization of workshops and conferences in the field of Software Engineering.
His research focuses on the application of automated software engineering techniques to the modeling, architecture, and analysis of complex systems. The overarching goal is to simplify inherent system complexity for developers by leveraging expressive yet usable specification notations, languages, and architectural models, enabling AI-assisted automated engineering and reasoning for correct-by-construction adaptation, ethics operationalization, and the responsible integration of intelligent agents across the software development lifecycle.
His primary research contributions lie in the domains of self-aware systems that support autonomic self-management operations and autonomous self-adaptive behaviors, including multi-robot systems. These systems involve computing resources endowed with self-managing and decision-making capabilities, adapting dynamically to unpredictable changes, emerging goals, changing contexts, and end-user ethical preferences.
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